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Chapter 985 Chapter 981 [Guan brought to Beijing and joked with the emperor]

Yingmin Hall, father and son.

Zhao Han asked the prince: "What do you think of the three major medical schools jointly sponsoring the edict?"

Zhao Kuanghuan said: "Doctors, it is a matter of life and death, and important matters of the country can be accurately reported."

Due to the encouragement of the imperial court, there were three main medical schools in Chinese medicine at this time: Ziyang School, Wuzhong School, and Qiantang School.

Ziyang Sect, also known as Jinling Sect, Gezao Sect, and Military Medical Sect.

It was originally a group of Taoist priests in Gezaoshan who opened a medical school with the support of Zhao Han. Immediately afterwards, all Buddhists and Taoists in Jiangxi ordered those who returned to secular life to study this school's medical skills. After Zhao Han ascended the throne, he founded Jinling Medical College, which was formed through the exchange and integration of doctors from Nanjing and doctors from Jiangxi.

Gezaoshan relies on the Southern Medicinal Materials Distribution Center (Zhangshu Town), and its medicinal use has always been exquisite. Then he served as a large number of military doctors in Datong, and also engaged in anatomy research for a long time, quickly accumulating surgical clinical experience. Today, germs are still observed with microscopes, and more than ten types of pathogenic bacteria have been identified.

Wuzhong Sect, also known as the Plague Sect.

The famous doctor Wu Youke came out of the blue and collaborated with famous doctors and military doctors from all over the country to control and solve the great plague in Shandong, Henan, and Hebei. Yu Jiayan, a famous doctor from Jiangxi, Zhang Lu, a famous doctor from Suzhou, and others joined in, and their influence was very great. All the folk doctors in the north had more or less backgrounds in the Wuzhong sect.

Of course, they are not only good at preventing and treating plague, but are also proficient in internal medicine, pediatrics, and gynecology. Recently, they have also begun to use microscopes to observe germs.

The Qiantang Sect is also known as the Classical Sect, the Orthodox Sect, and the Restored Sect.

Before Zhao Han raised his army, this group began to gather people to give lectures and annotate medical classics.

They were similar to medical scholars and were deeply influenced by Neo-Confucianism in the late Ming Dynasty. Advocating practical learning, that is, focusing on clinical practice. Advocating to follow the classics and restore ancient medicine means to improve theory based on practice and re-annotate ancient medical books. They opposed self-preservation of the broom, encouraged doctors to communicate more, and were infinitely enthusiastic about gathering people to give lectures. Their medical philosophy was to "help the world, benefit the country, and save the people."

This time, three groups of doctors jointly signed the petition. The opportunity was the death of the famous doctor Zhang Zhicong.

Zhang Zhicong is the master of Qiantang Medical School, with disciples all over Zhejiang, Fujian and Guangdong. When the news of his death spread, famous doctors from various schools requested the emperor to grant him a posthumous title, and also requested that an additional medical center be built in the Hanlin Academy.

Hanlin Academy or Qintian Academy did not have a medical school because it already had a Department of Medicine, which was at the same level as the Department of Religious Affairs.

The Department of Medicine is not only responsible for managing doctors in various regions, but also manages medical schools in various regions. For example, Zhang Zhicong, who passed away this time, was a sixth-grade medical doctor, so he was qualified to ask the emperor for a posthumous title.

Zhao Han considered it carefully and wrote a reply: "I ordered the Ministry of Rites to select a posthumous title for the famous doctor Zhang Zhicong. Qintian Hospital will set up a medical museum and invite famous doctors from all over the country to join the museum to strengthen medical exchanges among various schools."

Today's three major medical schools each have their own strengths.

After the addition of the medical center, various factions communicated and integrated with each other, and learned from each other's strengths, which was conducive to the development of medicine.

The various factions despise and conflict with each other, and it is certain that they exist. But those who enter the hospital are all famous doctors. Who can be a famous doctor and who doesn’t learn from others’ strengths? Even those who are narrow-minded or obsessed with saving face may verbally look down on other companies, but they may quietly study it.

The four words "medical exchange" were circled by Zhao Han.

Prince Zhao Kuanghuan immediately understood the key and what the main function of the medical museum was.

Zhao Han said to the prince: "Spring is when a hundred flowers bloom. In the pre-Qin period, a hundred schools of thought contended, and each school fought and despised each other. In the end, it moved towards integration. Our current Confucianism is not purely Confucian Confucianism, but has absorbed Legalism, Mohism, and Taoist, military, Yin-Yang and many other thoughts. Do you understand?"

Zhao Kuanghuan said: "If one family is large, then thousands of horses will be silent. If the door is tight, then all the families will decline. As the Taoists say, running water will not rot and door hinges will not be beetrooted. This is the truth. This is true for all schools of medicine, and this is true for all Confucian schools. This is true for countries and dynasties. The same is true for churches and rivers and lakes. They must be open, communicate, compete, and flow before they can flourish."

"Great kindness." Zhao Han praised.

Zhao Han was happy to see the establishment of the medical center.

Hundreds of years later, Chinese people will look back on the early years of the Datong Dynasty and marvel at what kind of era this was. Confucianism, literature, art, science, medicine, military, commerce, agriculture, industry... ideas and technologies in various fields are exploding, as if China has opened a new chapter, recreating the lively scene of pre-Qin hundreds of schools of thought contending.

Zhao Han's decree to establish a medical clinic was issued, and more than 30 famous doctors from across the country gathered in Nanjing with their disciples.

The medical history of later generations called this "the crown belt entering Beijing".

Before the "Crown Belt came to Beijing", it was classified as the era of traditional medicine. The one hundred and fifty years after the "Crown Belt came to Beijing" was classified as the era of enlightenment medicine.

Zhao Han personally met with these famous doctors and the first thing he asked them to do was to formulate clear medical divisions. Internal medicine, surgery, gynecology, pediatrics, etc. have existed since ancient times, but they are still somewhat vague. From now on, they must be strictly defined in detail.

Dividing medical disciplines is more conducive to communication among various medical schools, allowing them to integrate around the sub-specialties.

At the same time, officials revised and annotated traditional medical books and collectively compiled medical books based on anatomy, microscopy and other methods. After the various factions are integrated, medical school textbooks must be compiled uniformly. The irreconcilable theories of the various factions, as elective reading in medical schools.

Fu Shan, a famous doctor who belongs to neither faction, was elected as the first director of Qintianyuan Medical Center. This gynecological master is responsible for mediating conflicts between various factions.

Gynecology guru is just a joke, he is also proficient in andrology and pediatrics. He was a barrister when he was young, which shows that he is proficient in the Four Books and Five Classics. He began to study Taoism in his middle age and is now one of the contemporary masters who expounds Zhuangzi. In addition, he is good at calligraphy, painting, and swordsmanship, and he is not an amateur with a knife.

Fu Shan also escorted the princes and daughters of the previous dynasty to the south. He had joined Zhao Han very early and often went to the palace to consult the royal family. He was the chief gynecologist for the queen and concubine, and the chief pediatrician for the prince and princess.

Such people are enough to suppress all major medical sects.

Jin Shengtan is fifty-four years old, and he wants to be an official.

Riding on the last train as an examiner, I stumbled all the way and actually became the county magistrate. Then, all kinds of flat adjustments, life and death can't be promoted.

He's very serious about what he does, and that's understandable. He likes to ridicule his boss and colleagues, which means that he is a scoundrel. He can make people stand up to the slightest contradiction.

In the new Datong Dynasty, the administration of officials was relatively clear.

As for Jin Shengtan's bad temper, because his political performance was not bad, he was promoted even after a lot of wastage. However, he only got a busy civilian job from the sixth grade, and was thrown into the provincial government to send and receive files all day long.

After working for half a year, Jin Shengtan resigned directly and came to Nanjing to join the literary world.

He was originally a famous literary critic, and he was living smoothly in Nanjing. He was very happy and comfortable all day long.

Wearing a long gown that had not been washed for half a month, Jin Shengtan came to the bookstore on crutches.

"Are there any new books in the past two days?" Jin Shengtan asked.

"Oh, Mr. Zhang is here," the bookstore owner came to greet him personally. "A batch of new books arrived a few days ago, and today there is a new magazine."

Jin Shengtan first read new books, two academic books and a novel. After flipping through the catalog of academic books, he found one of them readable, so he put it on the counter and prepared to buy it. I went to read the novel again. It was very vulgar and I couldn’t help but laugh: "Is this a novel? In today’s world, people can write novels even before they graduate from elementary school."

The bookstore owner smiled and said: "Don't tell me, this novel sells well. I also like it when renting bookstores. This is what ordinary people like to read."

Jin Shengtan shook his head repeatedly.

It was a martial arts novel with a pale storyline, poor wording and poor sentence construction, and no social common sense. But it’s fun to read, and it’s even borderline, making ordinary people laugh when they read it.

There are also such readings in Ming Dynasty novels, but at least the literary level is passable.

The novel in front of me has exceeded Jin Shengtan's bottom line - it was really written by a primary school graduate. The author has worked in a newspaper office for many years, and he is the lowest-level handyman. I went home from get off work and scribbled it, serialized it and it became popular, and now it is compiled into a book and sold.

It is precisely this kind of novel that is more suitable for the lower class people to read.

Because although the people at the bottom are literate, most of them have graduated from primary school or dropped out of school. They can't recognize slightly unfamiliar words, but they can read rough words smoothly.

This kind of book is usually sold to rental bookstores, and readers basically rent the book to read.

Jin Shengtan picked up the new magazine again, called "King of Chu Literature and Art", and he was surprised: "Published by the King of Chu?"

The bookstore owner smiled and said: "Who dares to mess around with the King of Chu's sign? This magazine is very good. I sold six copies in the morning. These ten copies are expected to be sold out today. I have already asked the clerk to ask the King of Chu to print it. There are four articles. The article was written by His Majesty himself.”

"Your Majesty's article?" Jin Shengtan quickly opened it.

Actually, only "The Emperor's New Clothes" was written by Zhao Han himself. The novel "The Female Consort" only tells a rough plot, but Zhao Kuangping still got the emperor's signature.

There are also two jokes that Zhao Han told his children. Zhao Kuangping created a special joke section to publish the emperor's jokes.

Although "Xiao Lin Guang Ji" was written in the Qing Dynasty, many of the jokes were collected from the Ming Dynasty's joke collection. At this time, he already liked to make jokes.

The magazine "King of Chu Literature and Art" opens with six jokes.

The signatures of the first two jokes are particularly interesting: Zhao Zi said (Sheng Tianzi).

Zhao Kuangping was afraid that someone would not know the emperor's pen name, so he deliberately added parentheses at the end to annotate it.

Jin Shengtan picked up the magazine and saw the first joke: A man went to the martial arts field, and a flying arrow accidentally hit him. The surgeon cures it. The doctor said: "It's easy." So he cut off the outer pole and asked for money to resign. Question: "How about internal cutting?" Answer: "This is internal science."

"Ha ha ha ha!"

Jin Shengtan suddenly burst out laughing, and gradually he couldn't stand up straight from his laughter.

The bookstore owner was puzzled: "This joke is very funny, but you don't have to laugh like this, right?"

Jin Shengtan shook his head repeatedly: "You don't understand, this is a satire on officialdom. Your Majesty is indeed a holy king, and he knows the habits of officialdom well. When I was an official, I encountered many such things."

In the New Dynasty of Datong, no matter how clean and clear the officialdom was, it was difficult to eradicate the unhealthy tendencies in the officialdom, and they became more and more serious as time went by.

After laughing for a long time, Jin Shengtan read the second joke: Mr. Wu, who started studying literature, failed in three years. Later, when he was practicing martial arts, he fired arrows in the school field, hit the drummers, and drove them out. Then he studied medicine, achieved success, wrote a good prescription, took it, and died.

This joke was told by Zhao Han to the fifth prince, telling Zhao Kuangji not to do anything half-heartedly.

Jin Shengtan finished reading the two jokes and had already made the emperor his confidant. The humor and irony of these two jokes suited Jin Shengtan's taste very well. He felt that the emperor was a wonderful man.

When I read "The Emperor's New Clothes" again, Jin Shengtan was completely convinced. The satire of this article was even more sharp!

After buying books and returning home, Jin Shengtan started writing a review article. He wanted to praise the emperor, and he praised and applauded him from the bottom of his heart.

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